How to Tell When Vegetables and Fruit Are Ready To Harvest

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How do you tell when to harvest vegetables and fruit? Different crops have their own tell-tale signs that let you know when they’re ready to eat. Read on or watch or video for top tips on how to judge—exactly—when your crops are ripe and ready, so you can enjoy your hard-won produce at its absolute peak.

How to Tell When Fruits and Vegetables are Ready for Harvest

Beets and turnips are most tender when they’re around golf ball sized. Don’t let them grow larger than a tennis ball or they’ll become tough and woody.

Carrots can be dug up whenever they’re big enough for your needs. Maincrop varieties can be left in the ground until you’re ready to use them, including over winter in milder areas.

Parsnips are ready once the leaves have died back, but for the sweetest roots wait to harvest after the first frosts.

Potatoes

Early potatoes usually flower around 10-12 weeks after planting, and they’re ready to harvest at this point. Carefully pull back the soil to expose a few tubers at the sides to check their size – hen’s egg size is good.

Wait until the foliage of maincrop potatoes for storing has died back, around 20 weeks after planting. Rub the skin of a tuber with your thumb. If the skin doesn’t rub off, they’re ready to harvest.

Peas and Beans

Feel the pods to judge the size of developing peas or fava beans, and shell a few to double-check.

The pods of pole beans and bush beans should be long and smooth. Don’t let them get too long or bulge with beans, or the pods will become stringy and plants less productive.

Fruiting Veggies

For fruiting veggies like peppers and tomatoes, look for a good, even color over the whole fruit.

Traditional varieties of cucumber are ready when there is no pronounced point at the tip. Pick them small for snacking on, or allow them to grow bigger for slicing.

The best-tasting zucchini are picked once they reach about four inches long. Summer squashes can be harvested as soon as they reach the size you need.

Leave winter squashes on their plants until late autumn. They’re ready when the stem has died off and hardened. Push your thumbnail into the skin – it should dent, but not puncture it.

Corn

When the tassels at the ends of corn cobs have shriveled up, peel back the sheath and push your nail into a kernel. If you see a milky liquid it’s ready to harvest. If the liquid is clear, wait a little longer.

Salad Leaves

Enjoy loose leaves of cut-and-come-again salads while they’re still young and tender. Heart-forming salads such as lettuce should be picked as soon as the heart has begun to firm up.

For the most succulent salad leaves pick them early in the morning.

Cabbage Family Crops

Cut cabbages as soon as the leaves have formed a tight, firm head. Winter frosts enrich the flavor of Savoy types, so don’t harvest these until you’re ready to use them.

Cabbage family plants that produce flower buds, such as broccoli or cauliflower, should be picked while the buds are still tightly closed.

Garlic, Onions and Shallots

Dig up garlic, onions and shallots when the foliage starts to die down in summer for using fresh.

For storing, wait two weeks once the foliage has turned yellow and toppled over. Dig up the bulbs and cure them for storing in a cool, dry place.

Tree Fruits

Cup apples or pears in the palm of your hand and twist gently. If it pulls away easily it’s ready. Softer tree fruits such as peaches and nectarines are ready when they become slightly softer at the stalk end of the fruit.

Soft Fruits

Berries and currants should be evenly colored. Raspberries will pull easily from their plug.

Leave blackcurrants for a week after turning black to develop their full flavor. Blueberries taste sweetest two or three days after turning blue.

grown in my garden this year

This year I ventured to grow cabbages both green and red. I made it a point of growing them for a fall/winter harvest and so far I'm not disappointed. They have been surrounded by onions (yellow and white) and these are doing quite well also. The beets came up so well and tasty that next year I will expand them. The raspberries sort of took over but I'm not unhappy as I'm getting a bounty. I just have to freeze them as I pick so I can make jam. This has been a good year for me and my garden as other years weren't as good as this year.

growing ginger

When sprouts appear, gently transplant the root to a 3-gallon (11 liter) pot, covering the top of the root with only 2 inches (5 cm) of soil. Add additional soil as the stems grow taller, and water as needed to keep the soil lightly moist.

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